A video on how TENG pretty much marks the moment Disney decided to shut down it's old-school animation style as well as when Disney decided to show less trust in creativity and more in marketability which led to over a decade of mediocre films from a company that was an iconic institution of quality...

The people who worked tirelessly during the disney renaissance are not the same people that started on this trends of abandoning traditional animation for cgi.

the last traditional disney animated movie I saw was the princess and the frog, and I enjoyed that, even if it got a less then stellar reception.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=irEBOfv4Ug4

It is pretty awful how every western animation studio is all cgi now, when traditional animation has so much more to give, style and creativity.

I've been a fan of Hayao Miyazaki's works for years, and he never stooped to going cgi with his beautiful animation. With him more or less departing from animation, I've become a fan of another director in similar vain as him, Mamoru Hosoda, who made the boy and the beast, wolf children, and the girl who leapt though time, all amazingly animated films in traditional animated style.

I like The Emperor's New Groove... It's a comedy, unlike most of their other animated films. Besides, if you think Disney was more devoted to artistic expression before TENG, look up "Disney reuse animation." Then there were the direct to video sequels. They've always been about the profit.

I like The Emperor's New Groove... It's a comedy, unlike most of their other animated films. Besides, if you think Disney was more devoted to artistic expression before TENG, look up "Disney reuse animation." Then there were the direct to video sequels. They've always been about the profit.

Uncle Walt was quite the asshole.

https://www.biography.com/news/walt-disney-biography-facts-video

During the 30s, he was a known Nazi sympathizer .... others were Stalin sympathizers.

I was raised on musicals. Oliver!, mary poppins, the sound of music, white christmas, charlie and the chocolate factory, rocky horror picture show, carousel, singin' in the rain.

I grew up with musicals too. Even when I was a kid, I don't think I was a big fan of the singing. I more tolerated the singing than enjoyed it. It seems like early movies were basically just recorded plays, little different from what you would expect to see in a live production. Then over time, film turned into its own separate entity. I prefer it that way.

I grew up with musicals too. Even when I was a kid, I don't think I was a big fan of the singing. I more tolerated the singing than enjoyed it. It seems like early movies were basically just recorded plays, little different from what you would expect to see in a live production. Then over time, film turned into its own separate entity. I prefer it that way.

I suppose, most musicals were theatrical in that regard, different era since maybe they thought if people couldn't get to theaters to see them, they'd bring them to the big screen that everyone was more into at that time.

Still, I think its these movies that made me appreciate theater production a lot more, something that has sadly lost its gravitas in modern day.